DENVER — With the playful fervor of uninvited guests the Eagles plan to crash Peyton Manning’s Mile-High party today.

The feeling in the Eagles locker room is the undefeated Denver Broncos are no different than any heavily favored team. The pressure is squarely on Manning, who is challenging records and his teammates at Sports Authority at Mile High (4:25 p.m., Channel 29, WIP 94.1-FM).

“They have great players, we have great players,” Eagles cornerback Cary Williams said. “They put their pants on the same way we put our pants on. We don’t see anybody out there who’s a superhero or anything like that. We’re going to go out there and we’re going to compete. We’re going to fly around and have fun.”

Manning has thrown 12 touchdown passes and zero interceptions while completing 73 percent of 122 attempts in a 3-0 start. Only the Baltimore Ravens knocked him out of rhythm with a four-man pass rush, and just for the first half of what became a runaway defeat.

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Rested and ready to build on a decent defensive performance their last time out, the Eagles (1-2) are convinced their opponent isn’t perfect.

“It only takes one series, one game for teams to get rolling and for teams to get hot,” Eagles linebacker Connor Barwin said. “And it only takes one series, one game for them to kind of go the opposite way. Obviously Peyton and the Broncos offense are in a nice groove right now. They’re playing at a very high tempo. But our job this weekend is to stop that. It only takes one game to do that.”

Manning isn’t hurting in the weapons department. The receiving corps is composed of perennial 100-catch guy Wes Welker, rough-tough Demaryius Thomas and the rugged J. Thomas, who with four touchdown catches is tied with Welker for the team lead.

Despite what, for most teams would be debilitating injuries at left offensive tackle and center, the Broncos have taken their attack to another level.

“It’s so early in the season,” Manning said. “The way everything works now is everybody makes these summary statements after one game, two games. We talk about the process here. And we’re just going through the process. This is the beginning of the process. We’re still figuring out who we are, kind of what we do best, what our identity is.

“We’re still getting on the same page. We’ve made some big plays. We’ve made some mistakes and we’re trying to iron those out. It’s going to be a tough day Sunday … I believe.”

The Eagles also believe.

With 10 days to recover, Chip Kelly’s up-tempo offense could play as fast as it did in the opener. The Eagles hit the wall in their last outing, their third in a block of 11 days.

The Broncos had issues with the Ravens in their opener until injuries depleted an already lean group of Ravens skills players.

Eagles quarterback Michael Vick, NFL rushing leader LeSean McCoy and game-breaking wide receiver DeSean Jackson are healthy and hopeful of doing what they did in the big first half of their win over the Washington Redskins.

“I think for the most part we’ve shot ourselves in the foot,” Vick said. “We’ve had our opportunities to score 30-plus points in all three games that we played. It’s just about putting it all together. It will come to us.”

McCoy invited the Broncos to crowd the line of scrimmage and jam up the ground game. That could open up the passing game.

For Vick, who seems to play up to the challenge of his marquee counterparts, the showdown with Manning is huge.

“I’m always playing the other team’s quarterback,” Vick said. “It’s competition. It’s not me versus him. It’s me versus his team. I can’t say I’ve got to have better stats. It’s about matchups. And they’re all great matchups. That’s the fun part about it. You just want to go out there and put on a good showing. But I never say I’m going to play better than Peyton or I want to play better than (Drew) Brees or try to outshine them. That’s not the purpose of it.”

Despite their sluggish start the Eagles seem to have purpose.

“I have a good feeling about this game,” offensive lineman Todd Herremans said. “But we still have to go out and execute.”

No Eagle is more confident than Williams, who was part of the Ravens squad that took Manning down in the playoffs en route to a Super Bowl title last season.

“It’s a good opportunity,” Williams said. “I don’t see it as an ‘aw, damn, we got them on the schedule.’ I see it as damn, ‘we’ve got them on the schedule. Let’s make it happen!’ It’s a wonderful opportunity.”